Interesting, eh? The areas of the States less likely to be vaccinated are the ones with more excess deaths.
Edit 1: add a link: https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w30512/w30512.pdf
Interesting, eh? The areas of the States less likely to be vaccinated are the ones with more excess deaths.
Edit 1: add a link: https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w30512/w30512.pdf
Yeah no info on mortality cause or associated mortality just opinion based reporting.
This could be anything including most medical folks are liberals and hospital policies foment ventilators and harse treatments like that but liberals knew this caused adverse deaths. So did they protect the like minded but "let the others go". Maybe the treatment was different vaxed vs unvaxed (at one point ventilators were only being assigned to unvaxed as it was believed the vaxed could not catch COVID so treatment was different leading to excess deaths in unvaxed to "prove a point" possibly?).
As you've said before there's a lot of nuance.
"What did he die of?"
"What was he registered as?"
Where is the opinion?
There's no context to "died of".
Generally speaking you die "with" COVID and another issue leads to your death. Very few people die "of" COVID.
Kind of like people don't die of "suddenly".
So you think that if Grandma dies because she has covid, and she wouldn't have died without it, but she didn't die of covid, then it doesn't count?
Well it's best to know when a nurse may go rougue:https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/mobile/nurse-charged-after-long-term-care-home-investigation-in-brampton-1.5468632
They aren't immune to psychopathy